Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Assessing Leadership of the Great and Middle-Level World Powers, 1927-1939. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 2.5 page paper that evaluates which leaders best served the national interest of their respective countries and which were the worst. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
2 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGgreatpow.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
term implies, this involves the formulation of policies believed to best serve the collective interests (security, economic and society) of the respective countries. In 1927, most of the worlds
great and middle-level powers were still reeling from the aftermath of the Great War, World War I. During this time period, avoidance of another cataclysmic international conflict was foremost
in the minds of leaders of the countries now designated as Great Powers, France, England and the United States, as a way of preserving their national interests. These countries
solidified their lofty global status on the basis of history and military prowess. However, international politics is often like a complex chess game of many players, and the so-called
middle-level powers of Japan, the Soviet Union, and Germany, were anxious to claim a piece of the world territorial and economic pie for themselves. During the late 1920s, French leader
Raymond Poincare named Aristide Briand as foreign minister, who quickly set about to promote a policy of appeasement. When the Great Depression hit, it hit the great powers especially
hard since they had the most to lose. While France and its counterparts were struggling to remain afloat financially, the prospect of any type of war was even more
unattractive than ever before. The appeasement position was reinforced by the government of Eduard Daladier, who did not authorize any type of military intervention when German troops illegally occupied
the Rhineland in 1936. Furthermore, when the French leadership signed the Munich Agreement (or Pact) of September 1938, this virtually ensured Germanys territorial aggression, despite Daladiers assurances that he
was "thinking only of the national interest" (Werth, 1942, p. 167). Frances long-time adversary, Great Britain, was pursuing a similar path between the years of 1927-1939. Great Britains preeminence
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